Immunogenicity and safety of a novel therapeutic hepatitis C virus (HCV) peptide vaccine: a randomized, placebo controlled trial for dose optimization in 128 healthy subjects.

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Citation

Firbas C, Jilma B, Tauber E, Buerger V, Jelovcan S, Lingnau K, Buschle M, Frisch J, Klade CS

Immunogenicity and safety of a novel therapeutic hepatitis C virus (HCV) peptide vaccine: a randomized, placebo controlled trial for dose optimization in 128 healthy subjects.

Vaccine. 2006 May 15;24(20):4343-53. Epub 2006 Mar 20.

PubMed ID
16581161 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

As interferon/ribavirin-based standard therapy is curative in only about half of HCV patients, there remains an important need for alternatives including vaccines. The novel peptide vaccine IC41 consists of five synthetic peptides harboring HCV T cell epitopes and poly-L-arginine as synthetic adjuvant. In this randomized, placebo-controlled trial, 128 HLA-A2 positive healthy volunteers received four s.c. vaccinations of seven different doses IC41, HCV peptides alone, poly-l-arginine alone or saline solution, every 4 weeks. IC41 was safe and well tolerated. Mild to moderate local reactions were transient. Immunogenicity was assessed using T cell epitope specific [3H]-thymidine proliferation, IFN-gamma ELIspot and HLA-tetramer assays. IC41 induced responses in all dose groups. Higher responder rates were recorded in higher dose groups and increasing number of vaccinations were associated with higher responder rates and more robust responses. Poly-L-arginine was required for the aimed-for Th1/Tc1-type immunity (IFN-gamma secreting T cells).

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